
14 February 2026
Trump Administration Targets $2 Trillion in Government Waste, CBO Warns of Mounting Deficits and Economic Challenges
Weekly Gov Efficiency Update: DC Pumping Tax Money?
About
Welcome to your Weekly Gov Efficiency Update: Is DC still pumping tax money? As President Trump's second term pushes the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE, to slash $2 trillion in waste, early results show modest cuts of $1.4 billion to $7 billion, mainly from workforce reductions, according to budget analysts cited in the Associated Press report on the Congressional Budget Office's latest outlook.
Yet, the CBO warns federal deficits will balloon, with the 2026 shortfall $100 billion higher than last year, totaling $1.4 trillion more through 2035, as debt climbs to 120% of GDP. Higher tariffs from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and immigration crackdowns add to spending on Social Security, Medicare, and interest payments, partially offset by $3 trillion in revenue but fueling inflation until 2030.
Critics like Michael Peterson of the Peterson Foundation call it an urgent warning, while Jonathan Burks of the Bipartisan Policy Center urges Congress to trim major cost drivers now. Meanwhile, DC-specific moves include 2.6% to 2.7% cost-of-living adjustments for public school teachers, police, and firefighters, effective April 2026, per the DC Department of Human Resources, and a proposed Office of Personnel Management rule revising reduction-in-force appeals amid firings.
Democrats, led by Rep. Lucy McBath and the New Dems, counter with an Affordability Agenda blasting Republican policies for hiking costs, proposing tariff rollbacks, housing builds, and paid leave. ML Strategies' 2026 Policy Outlook flags midterm pressures amplifying spending debates in energy, health care, and trade.
With a Senate Committee on Government Efficiency hearing set for February 16, as streamed on the Kansas Legislature YouTube channel, efficiency battles intensify—but deficits signal DC's tax money pump isn't slowing yet.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
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This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI
Yet, the CBO warns federal deficits will balloon, with the 2026 shortfall $100 billion higher than last year, totaling $1.4 trillion more through 2035, as debt climbs to 120% of GDP. Higher tariffs from the One Big Beautiful Bill Act and immigration crackdowns add to spending on Social Security, Medicare, and interest payments, partially offset by $3 trillion in revenue but fueling inflation until 2030.
Critics like Michael Peterson of the Peterson Foundation call it an urgent warning, while Jonathan Burks of the Bipartisan Policy Center urges Congress to trim major cost drivers now. Meanwhile, DC-specific moves include 2.6% to 2.7% cost-of-living adjustments for public school teachers, police, and firefighters, effective April 2026, per the DC Department of Human Resources, and a proposed Office of Personnel Management rule revising reduction-in-force appeals amid firings.
Democrats, led by Rep. Lucy McBath and the New Dems, counter with an Affordability Agenda blasting Republican policies for hiking costs, proposing tariff rollbacks, housing builds, and paid leave. ML Strategies' 2026 Policy Outlook flags midterm pressures amplifying spending debates in energy, health care, and trade.
With a Senate Committee on Government Efficiency hearing set for February 16, as streamed on the Kansas Legislature YouTube channel, efficiency battles intensify—but deficits signal DC's tax money pump isn't slowing yet.
Thank you for tuning in, listeners—please subscribe for more updates. This has been a Quiet Please production, for more check out quietplease.ai.
For more http://www.quietplease.ai
Get the best deals https://amzn.to/3ODvOta
This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI